Hillary Clinton’s election post-mortem, What Happened, won’t be released until next week, but the airing of grievances has already begun. While the first excerpts from her memoir centered on Donald Trump, whose creepy debate-stalking made her “skin crawl,” the latest focus on the man who appears to be second only to the Donald on Clinton’s hit list: Bernie Sanders. During the primaries, Clinton says she was told to “restrain” herself so that she wouldn’t alienate Sanders’s supporters. Now that the election is over, she’s not holding back.

“Because we agreed on so much, Bernie couldn’t make an argument against me . . . on policy, so he had to resort to innuendo and impugning my character,” Clinton writes in one passage. “Some of his supporters, the so-called Bernie Bros, took to harassing my supporters online. It got ugly and more than a little sexist. When I finally challenged Bernie during a debate to name a single time I changed a position or a vote because of a financial contribution, he couldn’t come up with anything.”

Nonetheless, the “Bernie Bros” ate up the Vermont senator’s liberal policy proposals, which he claimed he would accomplish by ushering in a “political revolution”—a bit of dreamy utopianism that apparently left the more pragmatic Clinton fuming. “Noting that his plans did not add up, that they would inevitably mean raising taxes on middle-class families, or that they were little more than a pipe dream—all of this could be used to reinforce his argument that I wasn’t a true progressive.”

Clinton writes that in addition to her own team, Barack Obama counseled her to lay off her opponent. “President Obama urged me to grit my teeth and lay off Bernie as much as I could. I felt like I was in a straitjacket.” It was like a scene out of There’s Something About Mary, she says, recalling a comparison made by her top policy aide Jake Sullivan, wherein Ben Stiller’s character picks up a “deranged hitchhiker” who says he’s going to introduce seven-minute abs to blow eight-minute abs right out of the water. “That’s what it was like in policy debates with Bernie. We would promise a bold infrastructure investment plan or an ambitious new apprenticeship program for young people, and then Bernie would announce basically the same thing, but bigger. On issue after issue, it was like he kept promising four-minute abs, or even no-minutes abs. Magic abs!”

Laying off Bernie and his policies during the primaries in order to appease his supporters while allowing him to attack her positions, Clinton says, “caused lasting damage, making it harder to unify progressives in the general election and paving the way for Trump’s ‘Crooked Hillary’ campaign.” And for that, Clinton believes, Sanders feels little to no remorse:

“I don’t know if that bothered Bernie or not. He certainly shared my horror at the thought of Donald Trump becoming President, and I appreciated that he campaigned for me in the general election. But he isn’t a Democrat— that‘s not a smear, that’s what he says. He didn’t get into the race to make sure a Democrat won the White House, he got in to disrupt the Democratic Party. He was right that Democrats needed to strengthen our focus on working families and that there’s always a danger of spending too much time courting donors because of our insane campaign finance system. He also engaged a lot of young people in the political process for the first time, which is extremely important. But I think he was fundamentally wrong about the Democratic Party—the party that brought us Social Security under Roosevelt; Medicare and Medicaid under Johnson; peace between Israel and Egypt under Carter; broad-based prosperity and a balanced budget under Clinton; and rescued the auto industry, passed health care reform, and imposed tough new rules on Wall Street under Obama. I am proud to be a Democrat and I wish Bernie were, too.”